Contemporary politics, local and international current affairs, science and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
Truth never damages a cause that is just ~ MAHATMA GANDHI

Thursday, 6 July 2017

Climate Change Denial Is a Crime Against Humanity on a Planetary Scale

Recently I wrote to several environmental attorneys I worked with during my career with the U.S. EPA.It
was a plea for help to find a legal way to prosecute those deceiving
the public about global warming, climate change and the consequences to
the future of civilization. Consider this as a letter to all jurors as a
plea for help to stop these crimes against humanity.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

Dear […],

We have got to find a way to stop the lies and the knowing and willful deception by a few self-serving sociopaths.

Most of civilization has moved so far
away from the natural world that it no longer associates water, soil,
planetary systems, the climate with day-to-day life. Rapid urbanization
only increases the schism between the sciences and culture. The fact
remains, the climate impacts the bottom as well as the top of the entire
food chain in the biosphere.

Only a small difference in temperature
and climate can make a dramatic difference in regional ecology. The
difference between the ecology of Eastern and Western Washington state;
or Seattle and San Francisco is only about 3℉ in mean temperature.
Science is telling the world that we are dashing right past 3.6℉ (2℃)
and headed toward 7.2℉ (4℃) or more, as if that only means a sunny day
at the beach. This summer we hit 120℉ near Walla Walla, Washington and
beat the old record by 7℉.

Global warming isn’t uniform. The Middle
East already hits 125℉ to 130℉ in much of the region. The best model
projections indicate that it will be reaching 130 to 140℉ before
mid-century. People simply can’t live at those temperatures.

Last
May, the Indian capital of New Delhi reached 45.5ºC (114ºF), five
degrees higher than the seasonal average. This photograph, taken on May
25, shows a zebra crossing near Delhi’s Safdarjung Hospital melting in
the heat. The heat wave is linked to the deaths of at least 800 people. (Image Credit: Sanjeev Verma / Hindustan Times)

The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD)
reports that the Arab Spring began when global grain prices exploded.
The DoD made the connection between global grain price increases and a
heat wave, fires and a 40 percent loss in Russia’s wheat crop.

People look to their governments when
emergency situations arise. Failed states, and there are a growing
number, can’t help them. How many meals would you have to miss before
you acted out, hit the streets in protest, or worse? Millions are on the
move today. Hundreds of thousands have died and many times that will
die in the future without adequate, affordable food and water.

To quote myself, “When people don’t have food and water they tend to get rowdy.”

The climate not only determines what
crops can be grown, but where rain falls and how much. People get their
milk and bread from the market, but it actually comes from a habitable
climate, rich soil and abundant water. There is a reason scientists use
the term “food chain.” If you break one link, the entire system changes.
Those changes are permanent and the ecosystem never, ever, reverts back
to what it was.

Let’s look at our largest ecosystem, the
oceans. The oceans absorb carbon dioxide, but that turns into carbonic
acid. Carbonic acid erodes the carbon in the exoskeletons of plankton,
krill, corals and mollusks at the bottom of the food chain. We have
lowered the pH of the world’s ocean an average of 30 percent.The
rate of pH change is faster than many species can adapt to or evolve.
Phytoplankton and zooplankton have a symbiotic (mutually beneficial
interdependency) relationship. Without krill, we lose food for small
fish. No Krill, no food chain — no Salmon, Tuna, Cod and so on.

There is one other significant fact that
people tend not to think about. Phytoplankton convert solar energy into
tissue. In this process of photosynthesis, they use carbon dioxide and
produce oxygen. Roughly 28 percent of Earth’s atmospheric oxygen comes
from forests, but 70 percent comes from marine plants. If we
over-saturate the oceans with carbon dioxide, we are destroying the
single largest contributor of oxygen to the air we breathe.

You were two of the best environmental
attorneys I ever worked with. When you and I discuss crimes against
humanity, we are actually looking at crimes against the entire planet
and systems that support life as we know it. We give tickets for
spitting on the sidewalk or smoking because it threatens public health. I
find it tragically ironic that we find it so difficult to find a way to
prosecute crimes against humanity and the self-serving lies against
anthropogenic global warming and the climate changes it causes. This
isn’t just crimes against humanity. It is threatening the entire planet.
It is biocide on a planetary scale.

We must stop this suicidal insanity and the intentional lies driving civilization to extinction.

No comments:

Post a Comment

About Me

I was inspired to start this when I discovered old editions of "The Worker". "The Worker" was first published in March 1890, it was the Journal of the Associated Workers of Queensland. It was a Political Newspaper for the Labour Movement. The first Editor was William "Billy" Lane who strongly supported the iconic Shearers' Strike in 1891. He planted the seed of New Unionism in Queensland with the motto “that men should organise for the good they can do and not the benefits they hope to obtain,” he also started a Socialist colony in Paraguay.
Because of the right-wing bias in some sections of the Australian media, I feel compelled to counter their negative and one-sided version of events.
The disgraceful conduct of the Murdoch owned Newspapers in the 2013 Federal Election towards the Labor Party shows how unrepresentative some of the Australian media has become.